Filatenkov Alexander, Baker Jeanette, Mueller Antonia M S, Kenkel Justin, Ahn G-One, Dutt Suparna, Zhang Nigel, Kohrt Holbrook, Jensen Kent, Dejbakhsh-Jones Sussan, Shizuru Judith A, Negrin Robert N, Engleman Edgar G, Strober Samuel
Division of Immunology and Rheumatology, Department of Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California.
Division of Blood and Bone Marrow Transplantation, Department of Medicine, Stanford University, School of Medicine, Stanford, California.
Clin Cancer Res. 2015 Aug 15;21(16):3727-39. doi: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-14-2824. Epub 2015 Apr 13.
The goals of the study were to elucidate the immune mechanisms that contribute to desirable complete remissions of murine colon tumors treated with single radiation dose of 30 Gy. This dose is at the upper end of the ablative range used clinically to treat advanced or metastatic colorectal, liver, and non-small cell lung tumors.
Changes in the tumor immune microenvironment of single tumor nodules exposed to radiation were studied using 21-day (>1 cm in diameter) CT26 and MC38 colon tumors. These are well-characterized weakly immunogenic tumors.
We found that the high-dose radiation transformed the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment resulting in an intense CD8(+) T-cell tumor infiltrate, and a loss of myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSC). The change was dependent on antigen cross-presenting CD8(+) dendritic cells, secretion of IFNγ, and CD4(+)T cells expressing CD40L. Antitumor CD8(+) T cells entered tumors shortly after radiotherapy, reversed MDSC infiltration, and mediated durable remissions in an IFNγ-dependent manner. Interestingly, extended fractionated radiation regimen did not result in robust CD8(+) T-cell infiltration.
For immunologically sensitive tumors, these results indicate that remissions induced by a short course of high-dose radiotherapy depend on the development of antitumor immunity that is reflected by the nature and kinetics of changes induced in the tumor cell microenvironment. These results suggest that systematic examination of the tumor immune microenvironment may help in optimizing the radiation regimen used to treat tumors by adding a robust immune response.
本研究的目的是阐明有助于用30 Gy单次辐射剂量治疗的小鼠结肠肿瘤实现理想完全缓解的免疫机制。该剂量处于临床上用于治疗晚期或转移性结直肠癌、肝癌和非小细胞肺癌的消融剂量范围的上限。
使用直径大于1 cm的21天龄CT26和MC38结肠肿瘤,研究暴露于辐射的单个肿瘤结节的肿瘤免疫微环境变化。这些是特征明确的弱免疫原性肿瘤。
我们发现高剂量辐射改变了免疫抑制性肿瘤微环境,导致强烈的CD8(+) T细胞肿瘤浸润,并使髓系来源的抑制细胞(MDSC)减少。这种变化依赖于抗原交叉呈递的CD8(+)树突状细胞、IFNγ的分泌以及表达CD40L的CD4(+) T细胞。抗肿瘤CD8(+) T细胞在放疗后不久进入肿瘤,逆转了MDSC浸润,并以IFNγ依赖的方式介导持久缓解。有趣的是,延长分割放疗方案并未导致强大的CD8(+) T细胞浸润。
对于免疫敏感肿瘤,这些结果表明短疗程高剂量放疗诱导的缓解依赖于抗肿瘤免疫的发展,这由肿瘤细胞微环境中诱导变化的性质和动力学所反映。这些结果表明,系统检查肿瘤免疫微环境可能有助于通过增强免疫反应来优化用于治疗肿瘤的放疗方案。